A while back I tried using the Darwin engine with various XWindow ports for MacOS X... no luck.
I had hoped that with Apple's own port of X11 coming out, things would clear up.
However, the Darwin engine still bombs all over the place running under X11. It DOES launch, but you can't get far withou
--On Monday, January 13, 2003 17:01:43 -0800 Scott Rossi
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Recently, "andu" wrote:
How do you determine
the number of the item that corresponds to where mouse was clicked?
Something like:
# set the style of each item to link first
set the itemdel to tab
put the cl
Recently, "andu" wrote:
>> How do you determine
>> the number of the item that corresponds to where mouse was clicked?
>
> Something like:
>
> #set the style of each item to link first
> set the itemdel to tab
> put the clickText into cText
> put itemOffset(cText, the_Line)
This is a good sugg
--On Monday, January 13, 2003 16:16:48 -0800 Scott Rossi
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
How does one determine the number of the item in which the selectedText
falls?
Situation: a field containing several tab-delimited items on a line.
Set 1Set 2Set 3Set 4Set 5
The mouse is click
|
| The best, in my mind, would be to build a general purpose example app,
| directly descibed and shared on the Metacard list, to let evryone become
| able to understand how the purposed technology works and how to reuse it
| to build, from scratch,
| other kinds of dedicated apps.
Agree
How does one determine the number of the item in which the selectedText
falls?
Situation: a field containing several tab-delimited items on a line.
Set 1Set 2Set 3Set 4Set 5
The mouse is clicked somewhere in the line of text. How do you determine
the number of the item that corr
|
| Sorry. I'm on so many Mac mailing lists that I forget sometimes that
| everyone else isn't the Mac addict that I am.
|
| OS X is not perfect, no OS is. But OS X is by far my favorite OS to work
| on, and at my job I work on many (Win 98, Win 2K, Win XP, Win NT, Mac OS 9,
| Mac OS X, Mac OS
> What's the syntax for determining
> the members of a group?
> members of group x
> objects of group x
> elements of group x
> buttons/fields/players etc of group x
Don't pull out your hair, Rodney. ;-)
I think the work you are looking for is "PARTS".
___
--On Monday, January 13, 2003 11:36:55 -0800 "Ray G. Miller"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Metacardians,
Looks like the field problem season...
I've a case where a scrollngfield will NOT take the focus unless it is
clicked into with the mouse.
This field's properties are identical to the previo
Metacardians,
Looks like the field problem season...
I've a case where a scrollngfield will NOT take the focus unless it is
clicked into with the mouse.
This field's properties are identical to the previous 5 fields, i.e.:
Taverse on
auto tab
hilite on
fixed line height
This Reluctant Field was
Yes, but you need an SLR camera like the Nikon D100 which is a digital
camera but uses standard Nikon AF lenses.
On Monday, January 13, 2003, at 09:10 AM, Michael Kann wrote:
Interesting concept. Would it work with a digital
camera?
--- Simon Lord <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi all, if you are
Interesting concept. Would it work with a digital
camera?
--- Simon Lord <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi all, if you are not interested in photography or
> 360° virtual
> imagery then please ignore my post. I'm selling a
> 360° lens for
> standard 35mm cameras which has served me very well
> in
What's the syntax for determining the members of a group? It isn't
referred to under group properties in the Reference stack, or in the
Concepts and Techniques stack under Groups topic. Might be a good
thing to make more obvious if these stacks are being revised.
For me the following syntax o
Hi all, if you are not interested in photography or 360° virtual
imagery then please ignore my post. I'm selling a 360° lens for
standard 35mm cameras which has served me very well in the past for
creating QuickTime VR's and panorama's.
All the details are here: http://www.marelina.com/behere/
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